Call to free journalists imprisoned in Prophet cartoons row-REPORTERS WITHOUT BORDERS
Call to free journalists imprisoned in Prophet cartoons row-REPORTERS WITHOUT BORDERS
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Reporters Without Borders / Reporters sans frontières
Press release

17 February 2006

Call to free journalists imprisoned in Prophet cartoons row

Reporters Without Borders today launched an appeal and a petition for the immediate release of seven journalists thrown into prison in Yemen, Syria and Algeria for reprinting the controversial Prophet cartoons as part of informing their readers.

"Whatever one thinks of the cartoons or whether they should be published, it is absolutely unjustified to jail or prosecute journalists, threaten them with death or shut down newspapers for this reason," the worldwide press freedom organisation said.

At least twelve journalists are being prosecuted in five countries and seven have been jailed.  Some face long prison sentences if convicted.  Two editors in Jordan have been charged with provocation and encouraging disorder.  Three journalists have been jailed in Yemen and charged under article 103 of the press law, which bans publication of anything that "harms Islam, denigrates monotheistic religion or a humanitarian belief."  Reporters Without Borders calls for all criminal cases among these to be dropped.

Thirteen publications have been closely temporarily or permanently in Algeria, Morocco, Jordan, Yemen, Malaysia and Indonesia for reprinting the cartoons.  Reporters Without Borders demands that these bans be lifted.

A conference to discuss the cartoons crisis on 9 February in Paris stressed that nothing could justify the imprisonment of journalists.  More than a dozen journalists, intellectuals and religious officials from Western and Arab/Muslim countries attended the meeting, organised by Reporters Without Borders and the Arab Commission for Human Rights, and appealed for calm and dialogue.  A similar conference will be held in Cairo on 25 February.

Reporters Without Borders calls on everyone to take a stand in support of the imprisoned journalists, who were simply doing their job and passing on news that made headlines around the world.


Posted on Saturday, February 18, 2006 (Archive on Tuesday, February 28, 2006)
Posted by PANDERRYMBAI  Contributed by PANDERRYMBAI
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